Ejnar Hertzsprung and Henry Norris Russell,working independently, realized the relationship between a star's temperature and its brightness.Together, in 1910, they formed what is now known as the Hertzsprung--Russell diagram or HR Diagram.It's a scatter graph showing the relationship between a star's absolute magnitudes, their spectral types and temperatures.
The brightness of a Cepheid star is determined by its period-luminosity relationship, which is a relationship between the star's variability period and its intrinsic luminosity. By measuring the period of a Cepheid star, astronomers can use the period-luminosity relationship to calculate its luminosity, and from there determine its apparent brightness as observed from Earth.
The temperature determines the humidity.
I believe you are thinking of a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, but this denotes the relationship between a stars luminosity and it's spectral class.It has nothing to do with the life cycle of a star.See related questions for more information
The first to classify stars by their brightness was the Greek astronomer Hipparchus in the 2nd century BC. He ranked stars based on their apparent magnitude, with 1 being the brightest and 6 being the faintest.
As temperature increases the absolute brightness increases
Brightness tells you the temperature and mostly temperature would tell the brightness of the star that we are talking about.
Hertzsprung and Russell.
Hertzsprung and Russell.
edwin hubble
Information on millions of stars shows that there is a relationship between temperature and brightness. Surface temperature is measured in degrees C and brightness is measured in absolute magnitude (the star's brightness at a standard distance). If all the stars are plotted on a graph of temperature against absolute magnitude, called a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, very many of them lie close to a straight line that is called the Main Sequence. There are some stars that do not lie on the Main Sequence, notably the red giants that are very bright despite having a relatively low temperature. The Sun is right in the middle of the Main Sequence showing it is an average star in the middle of its life and very stable.
i hate you !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
Information on millions of stars shows that there is a relationship between temperature and brightness. Surface temperature is measured in degrees C and brightness is measured in absolute magnitude (the star's brightness at a standard distance). If all the stars are plotted on a graph of temperature against absolute magnitude, called a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, very many of them lie close to a straight line that is called the Main Sequence. There are some stars that do not lie on the Main Sequence, notably the red giants that are very bright despite having a relatively low temperature. The Sun is right in the middle of the Main Sequence showing it is an average star in the middle of its life and very stable.
Information on millions of stars shows that there is a relationship between temperature and brightness. Surface temperature is measured in degrees C and brightness is measured in absolute magnitude (the star's brightness at a standard distance). If all the stars are plotted on a graph of temperature against absolute magnitude, called a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, very many of them lie close to a straight line that is called the Main Sequence. There are some stars that do not lie on the Main Sequence, notably the red giants that are very bright despite having a relatively low temperature. The Sun is right in the middle of the Main Sequence showing it is an average star in the middle of its life and very stable.
as surface temperature increases, luminosity increases
The relationship between wavelength and hue is that shorter wavelengths correspond to cooler colors like blue and longer wavelengths correspond to warmer colors like red. This relationship is similar to the relationship between brightness and intensity, where higher brightness levels correspond to higher intensity levels.
The relationship between a star's temperature and brightness was discovered independently around 1910 by Ejnar Hertzsprung and Henry Norris Russell. The relationship between these to parameters is depicted in a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram or H-R diagram.